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气候变化与非洲家庭医疗融资负担

Climate change and the burden of healthcare financing in African households.

机构信息

Department of Nursing, Faculty of Health Sciences and Technology, Ebonyi State University, Abakaliki.

出版信息

Afr J Prim Health Care Fam Med. 2023 Jan 31;15(1):e1-e3. doi: 10.4102/phcfm.v15i1.3743.

Abstract

Climate change is a mounting pressure on private health financing in Africa - directly because of increased disease prevalence and indirectly because of its negative impact on household income. The sources and consequences of the pressure constitute an important area of policy discourse, especially as it relates to issues of poverty and inequality. Relying on a panel dataset involving 49 African countries and the period 2000-2019, as well as a random effect regression analysis, this report shows that climate change has a positive and significant impact on the level of out-of-pocket health expenditure (OPHE) in Africa, and an increase in the level of greenhouse (CO2) emissions by 1% could bring about a 0.423% increase in the level of OPHE. Indirectly, the results show that, compared with the regional average, countries that have higher government health expenditure levels, above 1.7% regional average, and face higher climate change risk may likely record an increase in OPHE. Alternatively, countries with higher per capita income (above the regional annual average of $2300.00) are likely to record a drop in OPHE. Countries with lower climate change risk and a lower than the regional average age dependency (above the regional average of 80.4%) are also likely to record a drop in OPHE. It follows that there is a need for policy alignment, especially with regard to how climate change influences primary health care funding models in Africa.Contribution: The results of this research offer policymakers in-depth knowledge of how climate change erodes healthcare financing capacity of government and shifts the burden to households. This raises concerns on the quality of accessible healthcare and the link with poverty and inequality.

摘要

气候变化给非洲私人卫生融资带来了越来越大的压力——直接原因是疾病发病率上升,间接原因是气候变化对家庭收入产生负面影响。这种压力的来源和后果构成了政策讨论的一个重要领域,特别是因为它与贫困和不平等问题有关。本报告利用涵盖 49 个非洲国家和 2000-2019 年期间的面板数据集以及随机效应回归分析,表明气候变化对非洲的自付医疗支出水平有正向且显著的影响,温室气体(CO2)排放量每增加 1%,自付医疗支出水平就会增加 0.423%。间接结果表明,与区域平均水平相比,政府卫生支出水平高于区域平均水平 1.7%、面临更高气候风险的国家可能会增加自付医疗支出;而人均收入较高(高于区域年平均水平 2300.00 美元)的国家可能会减少自付医疗支出;气候风险较低和年龄抚养比(低于区域平均水平 80.4%)较低的国家也可能会减少自付医疗支出。因此,需要政策趋同,特别是考虑到气候变化如何影响非洲的初级卫生保健融资模式。本研究的结果为政策制定者提供了深入了解气候变化如何侵蚀政府医疗保健融资能力并将负担转移到家庭的知识。这引发了人们对可获得的医疗保健质量以及与贫困和不平等的联系的担忧。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/bb9a/9900300/db4e64001fa8/PHCFM-15-3743-g001.jpg

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